男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
  Home>News Center>China
       
 

Cabbages out for Beijing's winter
By Wang Ying (China Daily)
Updated: 2004-11-05 09:33

How many dishes can be made from da baicai, or Chinese cabbage?

Chinese cabbage in sour sauce. Cabbage soup. Cabbage and bean curd soup. Steamed cabbage. Cabbage with dried shrimp. Cabbage salad. Cabbage with mustard. Pickled cabbage. And on special days, dumplings of cabbage and minced pork.


A farmer carries a package of Chinese cabbage to sell at market in Beijing. [newsphoto/file]

Two decades ago, a Chinese housewife needed to learn how to vary the evening meal by using da baicai in different dishes as it was the only vegetable that sustained the masses through the icy months in northern China.

A lost tradition

To the Chinese capital, the dawn of November meant one thing - the invasion of winter Chinese cabbages.

For old Beijingers, storing up green vegetables before the cold weather hit was an annual tradition.


Beijingers now have many choices of vegetable during the winter. [newsphoto]

This week, the Chinese cabbages are still coming, right on schedule. But it's not like it used to be.

The average wholesale price of this year's winter Chinese cabbage reached 0.23 yuan (3 US cents) per kilogramme, only half what it was in 2003, according to officials with Beijing Agriculture Bureau.

Beijing's output of winter Chinese cabbage this year has shrunk by 9 per cent from last year's to 740 million kilogrammes, officials said.

At a grocery market in Andingmen in Beijing's Dongcheng District, piles of cabbages were stacked neatly on shelves but were seldom bought.

The market's inventory this week includes about 100 varieties of vegetables including many that farmers hadn't heard of a decade ago, such as the iceberg lettuce and monkey-head mushrooms.

Grandpa Li, in his early 70s, bought just four cabbages. He said he used to buy 100 kilogrammes of the vegetable in time for winter.

"Why hoard Chinese cabbages when so many other delicacies are available?" Li said.

The rows upon rows of greenhouses in the city's suburbs mean Beijing can now stock a host of fresh vegetables and fruit in the winter season.

Cabbages now account for just 7 to 10 per cent of all vegetable sales in Beijing, agricultural statistics indicate. Twenty years ago, the figure was 95 per cent. Ten years ago, it was between 50 and 70 per cent.

Urbanization has led to a decline in cabbage-growing in Beijing and a better choice of veg has relegated the former favourite to the pantry.

However, some residents' tastes have not changed.

"I still have fond memories of da baicai - it was our daily food, like rice and steamed bread," said Wang Qingfu, a retired engineer in his early 60s in Beijing.

But he now doesn't feel the need to store it up.

"I don't need to fill my home with da baicai anymore because the nearby community market restocks its fruit and vegetable section every morning with fresh ones," Wang said.

"And I no longer need to get my children to compete for cheap cabbage at the beginning of winter and then bargain with my neighbours for space to store it," he said.

In today's Beijing, more than 11 million kilogrammes of fresh vegetables, of about 300 kinds, are sold daily, agriculture officials said.

Many large supermarkets, such as the French superstore Carrefour and US-based Wal-Mart, sell lots of canned vegetables.

As the winter comes, many truckloads of da baicai head south - where it seems diners like those in South China's Guangdong Province are hungry for a taste of old Beijing.

"It's a delicacy there," said Yang Meixia, a Guangzhou resident in the capital city, Guangdong. "Now southern vegetables come north and northern vegetables go south and we enjoy more food varieties."

Legend of da baicai

The most common form of Chinese cabbage has a cylindrical tight head 10 centimetres wide and up to 40 centimetres long. The outer leaves are light green with a white midrib and the inner leaves are creamy yellow.


A woman loads up her tricycle with Chinese cabbage at a market in Beijing at the end of October last year. Such enthusiasm in storing the once indispensable vegetable has been seen far less among Beijingers in recent years. [newsphoto]
Locals used to line up to buy it.

"There were basically no other vegetables in winter. No one could afford other vegetables anyway," said Yang Jingting, 48, an owner of a Beijing restaurant.

Every winter, rickety trucks laden with the vegetable streamed into the city. People loaded up their donkey carts and wheelbarrows, anxiously stocking up. Families without fridges lined them up on their grey rooftops.

A 1988 shortage caused panic buying, and a glut in the next year left 80,000 tons piled in the streets.

The only way to clear it was for Beijing government officials to order public offices, schools, factories and army units to stock up.

Da baicai was once called "patriotic vegetable" in Beijing and some buyers even received subsidies from the government to buy it.

In 1992, the government cut its cabbage subsidy. Five years later, it deregulated the price.

To guarantee that Beijingers could get enough of the veg, local government granted special permits to vehicles bringing it in from other provinces.

They would get priority at inspection stops along the roads and the usual transport fees were waived.

The Chinese cabbage heyday has passed. It's left to the old, who admit they still buy it from habit, to keep it on the shelves at all.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Nation likely to be 3rd largest trading power

 

   
 

Nutritional imbalance plagues people

 

   
 

Mine blast kills 33, injures 6 in Henan

 

   
 

Coal mining: Most deadly job in China

 

   
 

Shen and Zhao win Cup of China

 

   
 

Consumer price remains stable in October

 

   
  Hu pledges strategic partnership with Brazil
   
  Coal mining: Most deadly job in China
   
  Mine blast kills 33, injures 6 in Henan
   
  Consumer price remains stable in October
   
  Work on anti-trust legislation stepped up
   
  Wen: Nation strengthens ties with Luxembourg
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 巢湖市| 潞西市| 礼泉县| 彩票| 枣庄市| 太白县| 新建县| 水城县| 昌宁县| 巍山| 永德县| 咸宁市| 九台市| 洛南县| 大余县| 称多县| 巴彦淖尔市| 游戏| 宁晋县| 金寨县| 来凤县| 梁河县| 普兰县| 平凉市| 县级市| 田林县| 罗甸县| 东方市| 二手房| 兴山县| 霍州市| 蒙城县| 平乐县| 中西区| 广河县| 桂东县| 松潘县| 长寿区| 宁陕县| 苗栗县| 三门峡市| 辽阳县| 海淀区| 郁南县| 顺平县| 连州市| 吉林市| 新兴县| 中宁县| 土默特左旗| 张家界市| 拉萨市| 溧水县| 石狮市| 龙口市| 武川县| 西丰县| 德令哈市| 平阴县| 苏尼特左旗| 尚义县| 固始县| 古交市| 雷波县| 卫辉市| 岑溪市| 白河县| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 淮南市| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 曲阜市| 江永县| 上栗县| 兴隆县| 宁远县| 广饶县| 江川县| 柳州市| 监利县| 锦屏县| 扶绥县| 西藏|